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The Arms Maker Of Berlin Part 6

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She shook her head disdainfully, as if such work was beneath her.

"Then why have you come here?"

"To offer my a.s.sistance to you. For afterward. When you are done with your review, you will want to know more. That is the nature of materials like these. They develop their own attraction."

Like you, he thought.

"That is when I will be able to help you. Because there is more material out there, waiting to be found. More than those four boxes."



So she knew the number of boxes. Her friend at the archives had been indiscreet, and somehow Nat wasn't surprised that the friend was a "he."

"How do you know there's more?"

"I have been studying this puzzle long enough to learn all its missing pieces."

"Just because they're missing doesn't mean they still exist. There was a war going on. Things got burned, bombed, or looted."

"Not in Switzerland."

Good point.

"So you say you want to help me. But I'm guessing what you really want is for me to help you."

"Describe it that way if you wish. I am convinced that between the two of us we can find what I'm looking for. When that happens, I will be happy to share the credit. And since you are far better known in our field, you will end up winning most of the glory. That is fine. It is not my concern. I am only interested in locating the information."

"I take it that your specialty is the White Rose?"

She nodded.

"Since I was fifteen."

"Goodness. It really is is your life's work." your life's work."

"My grandmother was a friend of a member when she was a girl. She told me all the stories. She said the friend was killed when the Berlin cell collapsed, or maybe 'imploded' is a better word. She said there were arrests, and even executions, but that all the official records were destroyed. She was determined to prove they had happened, but she was never able to travel into the West. A month after she died, the Wall came down. I took it as a sign that I was meant to continue the job for her."

So, another believer in the so-called Berlin cell. But at least this one seemed to have some firsthand information, even if a bit vague.

"Nice story. And I'd love to hear more about your grandmother's stories. But I'm afraid I still can't help you. Not yet, anyway." She nodded briskly, as if she expected nothing less from such a narrow thinker. "I do have one question, though. Any idea why Gordon Wolfe would refer to you as a 'd.a.m.ned nuisance'?"

For the first time Berta seemed knocked off balance, but she recovered quickly.

"I suppose it's because I approached him once as well. Several times. He, too, said no, and look where it got him. If you change your mind, my mobile number is on my card."

She gathered her handbag and briefcase and stood to leave. Nat had a vague sense of having narrowly avoided involvement in a very complicated venture. He wasn't sure whether to feel disappointed or relieved.

But like any good salesman, Berta Heinkel hadn't really finished. She had saved her best pitch for last.

"It's not just the White Rose that is of interest to them, you know."

"No?"

"No. It is the Berlin chapter in particular. Maybe they aren't willing to tell you that. But I am certain."

He shrugged and didn't say a word, although his expression probably told her all she needed to know.

"I even have a name," she said, reeling him in further. "Someone who is apparently mentioned in the materials."

"Yes?"

"Kurt Bauer, the arms merchant. Quite famous now, but he was practically a boy then, not even old enough for the army. But there will be no trace of him in those boxes, either. Unless it is some pa.s.sing reference to his father."

"Reinhard Bauer?" It slipped out before he knew it.

"Yes. So you have already found it. They met, you know."

"Who did?"

"Reinhard Bauer and your colleague, Gordon Wolfe. Kurt met Professor Wolfe, too, although they were both very young at the time."

"In Switzerland?"

"Yes. It happened because your friend was a spy, and not a very good one. At least, that's my theory. So you see? Already you know more than when I met you. Keep working with me and you will have a far better chance of getting all that you want."

The remark was stirring on several levels. Then she turned and slipped out the door, baggy blouse and all, although at that moment she couldn't have been more alluring to Nat if she'd been wearing high heels and a strapless gown. He watched her through the window all the way to her car, but she never once looked back. A virtuoso performance, he had to admit. He was breathless.

SIX.

WAS IT REAL or was he dreaming? or was he dreaming?

Berta Heinkel crawled toward Nat across the bed in the half-light before dawn. She wore a short nightgown of antique silk, the kind of precious material that might once have been traded for war ration coupons or black-market Luckies. Slinky and smooth, like her skin. He stroked his fingers down her back, the perfect start to his day.

A sharp knock at the door rudely answered Nat's question. He awoke to full daylight, an empty bed, and a painful erection. The innkeeper shouted crankily through the keyhole.

"Mr. Turnbull?"

"Yes?"

"You're wanted downstairs. A Mr. Holland. He says it's urgent."

"Tell him five minutes."

The bedside clock read 6:07 a.m. He knew Holland was in a hurry for him to finish the boxes by this afternoon, but this was ridiculous, seeing as how he had worked until almost ten o'clock the night before.

The innkeeper's footsteps receded down the stairs, but their sound was soon drowned out by the brusque approach of a heavier tread. Nat barely had time to pull his trousers over the bulge in his briefs before the door flew open. In stepped Clark Holland, suit pressed, tie knotted.

"Is this really necessary?"

"Gordon Wolfe is dead. We've got work to do."

"What? Gordon's dead? dead? How?" How?"

"Heart attack, less than an hour ago. They found him on the floor of his cell. An EMT revived him for a minute or two, but that was it. p.r.o.nounced dead at 5:23 a.m."

Nat sagged onto the bed and took a deep breath. His voice emerged from high in his throat, as if someone were squeezing his windpipe.

"His medication. Viv said-"

"That wasn't the problem. He got his pills yesterday."

"Does she know yet?"

"You're going to tell her. It's our first stop. But first I need some answers."

Holland swung himself onto the room's one and only chair, facing backward. He folded his arms on the top of it while Nat absorbed the blow. Nat was sitting where Berta had just been on all fours in his dream, and he was annoyed that he still couldn't shake the image, even in the face of this terrible news. Gordon was dead. Impossible. It felt as if twenty years of his life had just been wrenched loose, thrown into a box, and abruptly carted away before he could even catalog the contents.

"I can't believe he's gone."

"How did he seem when you spoke to him yesterday?"

He wished Holland would slow down with the questions.

"Well?"

"Same as always, I guess. Only sober. In a way he was almost happy spoiling for a fight. He looked pretty good. Or I thought he did."

"Was he especially agitated about anything?"

"He wasn't thrilled to be in jail, if that's what you mean. But I wouldn't say he was overwrought. Viv's the one I would have pegged for a breakdown. And you want me me to tell her?" to tell her?"

"Did you visit him last night?"

"No."

"Or any other time since you saw him in the courtroom?"

"No. That's the only time."

"Any phone calls between you?"

"None."

"You're certain?"

"Absolutely. What are you getting at?"

"What about the girl, the German you met at the diner at lunch yesterday? Did she visit him?"

At the mention of Berta he hunched over to hide the lingering evidence of his dream.

"Doubtful. You'll have to ask her."

"Did she relay any messages between you, either oral or written?"

"As far as I know she hasn't even spoken to him."

"Answer the question."

"No."

Holland stared for a few seconds, as if waiting for Nat to break. Then he stood quickly.

"Get dressed. We're going."

"There was one thing." It had just occurred to Nat, along with a nasty stab of guilt.

"Yes?"

"Gordon told me yesterday to ask you guys for better protection. And I never did, of course. I thought it was just more of his usual dramatics."

"Protection? Against what?"

"He said you'd know."

Holland shook his head, irritated.

"He was talking nonsense. Just like this morning."

"What do you mean?"

"In his only moment of consciousness, the EMT asked what he'd had for dinner the night before. He smiled and said he'd been to the Metropolitan Club in Was.h.i.+ngton. Those were his last words. The doctor figured it was some kind of private joke. Maybe you'd know the context?"

"The Metropolitan Club? Never heard of it."

"You're certain?"

"He must have been delirious."

Yet the phrase tugged at some old memory, just out of reach. Not from his shared experiences with Gordon-they had never been to Was.h.i.+ngton together-but from somewhere. Viv might know. Ugh. Telling her was going to be an ordeal for both of them.

But it wasn't Viv he was thinking of by the time Holland and he reached the bottom of the stairs. It was Berta Heinkel. Obviously he had been impressed by her performance in the diner. But now he was upgrading his review, because she had seemed to know things about Gordon that the old man had never told him. And now he would never be able to ask.

Over the next few days he would continue to be impressed. Because, by day's end, Berta Heinkel's peculiar expertise would be in great demand. And within a week she and Nat would be seated together on a Swissair nonstop from Was.h.i.+ngton to Bern-the very place where, long ago, Gordon Wolfe had begun a.s.sembling the makings of his own destruction.

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